Difference between revisions of "Diggers (San Francisco)"

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Le groupe fut fondé par [[Emmett Grogan]], [[Peter Coyote]], Peter Berg, et d'autres membres de la San Francisco Mime Troupe, incluant [[Billy Murcott]], [[La Mortadella]], et [[Butcher Brooks]].
 
Le groupe fut fondé par [[Emmett Grogan]], [[Peter Coyote]], Peter Berg, et d'autres membres de la San Francisco Mime Troupe, incluant [[Billy Murcott]], [[La Mortadella]], et [[Butcher Brooks]].
  
== Activities ==
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== Activités ==
The Diggers provided a free food service in the Panhandle of [[Golden Gate Park]] in [[Haight-Ashbury]] every day at 4.00 p.m. generally feeding over 200 people who had no other source of food. They served a stew made from donated and stolen meat and vegetables behind a giant yellow picture frame, called the Free Frame of Reference. On one occasion, at a free concert in the park people who came for the food were given a two-inch-by-two-inch frame to hang about their neck, called the portable Free Frame of Reference. Les Diggers ont aussi popularisé le pain de blé entier avec leur "Digger Bread", cuit dans des cannes à café à la Free Bakery.
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The Diggers provided a free food service in the Panhandle of [[Golden Gate Park]] in [[Haight-Ashbury]] every day at 4.00 p.m. generally feeding over 200 people who had no other source of food. They served a stew made from donated and stolen meat and vegetables behind a giant yellow picture frame, called the Free Frame of Reference. À une occasion en particulier, c'était un concert gratuit(Occupation) dans le parc, les gens qui venaient pour de la nourriture se faisaient donner un cadre 2poucesX2(1pouce=2.5cm) pour s'accrocher dans le cou. Le truc était appelé le portable "Free Frame of Reference". Les Diggers ont aussi popularisé le pain de blé entier avec leur "Digger Bread", cuit dans des cannes à café à la Free Bakery.
  
Ils ont ouvert de nombreux [[Magasin gratuit]] dans le quartier Haight-Ashbury, dans lesquels tous les items étaient à prendre ou à donner. The stores were funded by money from local merchants afraid of, or supporting the Diggers, who paid a one percent tithe to the Free City Bank. Les magasins ont offert des items qui avaient été jetés, mais étaient encore utilisable. Though these were used mainly as a front for the distribution, for free, of stolen goods. The first free store was called Trip Without a Ticket and was later superseded by the Free Frame of Reference on Frederick Street. They also opened a Free Medical Clinic.
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Ils ont ouvert de nombreux [[Magasin gratuit]] dans le quartier Haight-Ashbury, dans lesquels tous les items étaient à prendre ou à donner. Les magasins étaient matériellement fournis par les marchands locaux, qui, effrayés ou supporteurs des Diggers, payaient une contribution d'un pourcent de leurs ressources à la "Free City Bank". Les magasins ont offert des items qui avaient été jetés, mais étaient encore utilisable. Il faut tout de même dire que ces endroits étaient tout de même principalement utilisées comme une vitrine pour la distribution, gratuite, de biens volés. Le premier magasin gratuit a été appelé ''Trip Without a Ticket'' and was later superseded by the Free Frame of Reference on Frederick Street. Ils ont aussi ouvert une Clinique médicale gratuite.
  
 
They threw free parties with music provided by the [[Grateful Dead]], [[Janis Joplin]], [[Jefferson Airplane]] and other bands, sometimes with such sights as trucks of naked belly dancers driving through the neighborhood in the afternoon with black conga players, wine, and marijuana. Their publications, notably [[the Digger Papers]], are the origin of such phrases as "Do your own  thing" and "Today is the first day of the rest of your life". The Diggers fostered and inspired later groups like the [[Yippies]].  
 
They threw free parties with music provided by the [[Grateful Dead]], [[Janis Joplin]], [[Jefferson Airplane]] and other bands, sometimes with such sights as trucks of naked belly dancers driving through the neighborhood in the afternoon with black conga players, wine, and marijuana. Their publications, notably [[the Digger Papers]], are the origin of such phrases as "Do your own  thing" and "Today is the first day of the rest of your life". The Diggers fostered and inspired later groups like the [[Yippies]].  

Revision as of 16:06, 28 November 2006